It's found in Exodus 14:
"And the children of Israel went INTO THE MIDST OF THE SEA UPON DRY GROUND: and THE WATERS WERE A WALL UNTO THEM on their right hand, and on their left." (verse 22)
"...I would not that ye would be ignorant, how that ALL OUR FATHERS WERE UNDER the Cloud, and ALL PASSED THROUGH THE SEA; and WERE ALL BAPTIZED UNTO MOSES in the Cloud and IN THE SEA... for they all drank of that Spiritual ROCK that followed them: and that ROCK was CHRIST." (I Cor.10;1-4)
Yes, baptism is not explicitly mentioned in the Old Testament scriptures.
Baptism, as it is understood in Christianity, was not practiced in the Old Testament. The concept of baptism was introduced in the New Testament as a ritual symbolizing purification and initiation into the Christian faith.
Yes, baptism is not explicitly mentioned in the Old Testament, but there are rituals and ceremonies involving water that some scholars interpret as precursors to the Christian practice of baptism.
Infant baptism is based on the belief that baptism is a sign of God's covenant with believers, similar to circumcision in the Old Testament. Some Christians argue that since infants were included in the covenant in the Old Testament, they should also be included in the covenant of baptism in the New Testament.
People were not baptized in the Old Testament. Instead, there was circumcision of males at 8 days of age.
In the Old Testament, there are two main types of baptism mentioned: ritualistic cleansing with water for purification and symbolic acts of repentance and commitment to God.
Well as you should know Jesus was baptised in Lake Jordan by his cousin. It was done with a shell.
In the Old Testament, baptism was not a common practice like it is in Christianity. However, ritual washings were performed for purification before entering the temple or participating in certain religious ceremonies. These washings symbolized cleansing from sin and impurity, similar to the concept of baptism in Christianity.
Roman Catholic AnswerThere is only a Bible, the Bible used by the Catholic Church is the entire New Testament and the entire Old Testament. The only thing that makes it a "Catholic" Bible is the guarantee in the front of it that it conforms to the Bible as accepted by the Church since the fourth century. And, no, nowhere in the Bible does it say anything about sprinkling for baptism.
I believe it was Isaiah 42:1 and Isaiah 40:3-5
The baptism will be in the church records where the baptism was done.
The Old Testament.